Title:
A Long Night
Author:
Abbey, abbeycarter@aol.com
Rating:
PG
Summary:
Janeway and Chakotay have dinner together.
Disclaimer:
I don't own any of the characters, and I'm not using them for profit.
Chakotay
has prepared me a picnic on the holodeck, and I
suppose I should be pleased. But sometimes, being Captain gets the best of me,
and the thought of having to intelligently relate to another human being can be
too much to take. But thankfully, Chakotay isn't just another human being.
When
I enter the holodeck he's already there. It's about
2000 hours on Voyager, because meetings went late tonight, but here, it's just
before sunset somewhere in the
“Good
evening Commander. Thanks for the invitation.”
“Very
kind of you Captain, but don't thank me. It was Mr. Tuvok's
idea. He feels that you need to some time to relax. But he knows that you won't
do it on your own. He suggested that I invite you to dinner.”
“Oh...I
never would have...”
I
laugh and walk towards the thick blanket he stands next to, and we sit.
“My replicator
is behaving,” he smiles, and I settle down next to him. Sometimes it's hard to
pretend that this is easy for me, and when we're edging together on a blanket
tinted pink by the dying light of day is definitely one of those moments.
We
quietly work our way through the tomato and mozzarella dish he's replicated.
The bread is thick and crusty and we eat in silence, thankful that we don't
have to say anything. I watch as the sun dips below the canyon in the distance,
and sense him edging closer to me again, as if by instinct.
I
put my fork down and stare out.
“What
are you thinking about?”
“You.”
We
laugh because these days, these quiet nights, we can almost slip inside each
other's skins, can almost think for the other. We're beyond thinking about each other.
We
lie back in the dusk and watch the stars. Holographic though they may be, I can
tell that Chakotay has sensed my reaction. The wonder, and of course the
reminder that I am leading 150 people on a 75 year long journey through
hundreds of stars, and that the man sitting next to me endures my melancholia,
holographic heartbreaks, bouts of anger and occasional near death adventures.
That he not only endures me, but loves me in a manner that's intensity pans out
like the stars before us, in daily tasks; in his check of the duty roster,
lunch in the mess hall. That I have nothing to give him except the same; a
smile, a stare, and the silent assurance that he is always with me.
Now,
he shuts his eyes, as mine continue exploring. A strand of my hair dances onto
his shoulder and he opens his eyes, and looks at me gently, silently stating
that I don't have to move, that this sort of tenderness is manageable, yet greater
than anything he could feasibly imagine now.
I
shut my eyes and begin to drift. I wonder if he's seeing someone. I wouldn't
mind. Next to me, he falls into the sound rhythm of a non-caffeine addict. He
is spent, and I remember that he worked two shifts yesterday. So he saved his
energy for dinner with his Captain.
There's
always the hope between us that we'll get home and be able to touch each other
like everyone else, have a relationship like everyone else. Be able to “love”
each other like everyone else. But he's only a man, and I can only get this
ship home so fast. And all this begs other questions. Would our love weaken if
we were able to follow convention? I can't help thinking that it might. Because we're different.
I
know a girlfriend wouldn't change our feelings. And that's the blessing and
tragedy of it all. She'd change how he'd express those feelings, but they would
still be there, a wall to lean on if I was gasping for breath. Affectionate and exasperated, tender and furious. We'd spend
less time together, cease dinners like these, but when we needed it, the love
would always be there. What it would actually do is another question all together. But I can't think of a life
without it. Without at least the memories. It's too
cruel to think of.
I
take one last look at the canyon before my head wobbles downwards onto the
blanket. He's out cold, and I can't bear to wake him and bring him to his
quarters. Or have Ensign Paris find him in the morning. I'm beyond sleep. 2330
hours. It may only be twilight here, but like I said, meetings ran late today,
and we take our time eating and thinking.
It's
no matter. I can wake him at 0500 hours. I won't fall asleep. I need time to
think, anyways. There are plenty of reports to compose in my head. My stomach growls
because of the coffee, and the twinge reminds me that I am alive. I allow my
arm to fall against his neck, and silently envision B'Elanna's
latest warp core advancements.
It’ll
be a long night; a long stewing for long thoughts, long reports, long love. My
eyelids fall shut and I think beneath them. Six hours isn't enough time to
define science, faith, the Maquis, or the mysteries
of engineering. But the sort of love that makes you stay up all night can aide
in the process.
END
(Index)